Registered
Public benefits
What are the direct benefits flowing from your organisation's purposes? Adventure Training, Welfare, Battlefield Tours and Sports. How can the benefits identified above be demonstrated? The Regiment can provide completed voucher forms accompanied by receipts which shows where, why and what the funds were allocated towards. Joining Instructions do
indicate where the funds will be allocated towards for example Adventure Training, Battlefield Tours, Sports and purchasing Sports equipment. Invoices are being filed for the records to ensure funds has been spent correctly. Is there any harm arising from any of the purposes? No. Who are the charity's beneficiaries? All members of the Regiment and spouses, children are the beneficiaries of the charity. Is there any private benefit flowing from any of the purposes? Is it incidental and necessary? No.
... [more] [less]What your organisation does
The PRI Fund is set up and managed in order to assist soldiers and officers in financing pursuits and activities that benefit them and the Regiment for which funding is not available from the public purse. The fund is not financed from public sources and is managed for the benefit of all members of the Regiment. Most commonly, the PRI Fund will be
used to finance activities such as: a. Adventurous Training. b. Purchase of equipment not available through the public purse. c. Sporting events and equipment. d. Welfare and benevolence
... [more] [less]The charity’s classifications
- Other charitable purposes
Who the charity helps
- Adult training
- Children (5-13 year olds)
- Ethnic minorities
- Learning disabilities
- Men
- Mental health
- Physical disabilities
- Preschool (0-5 year olds)
- Sexual orientation
- Victim support
- Women
- Youth (14-25 year olds)
How the charity works
- Cultural
- Education/training
- Gender
- General charitable purposes
- Playgroup/after schools
- Sport/recreation
- Welfare/benevolent
- Youth development